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Sunday, March 26, 2017

To Life - and to the ethnic influences in our work

S. Lee Manning: If you’ve ever watched the movie Fiddler on the Roof, the scene will be
familiar to you. The Jewish protagonist
and village philosopher Tevye toasts the engagement of his daughter to Lazar
Wolf with the other Jewish men in the village tavern, singing the well-known
words, L’Chaim– To Life. In the midst of their celebration, a group of young Russian men begin to sing, starting with the words zha vasha z'darovia – to your health. Reluctantly and a little afraid, Tevye accepts
a young Russian man’s offer –and they dance together. A great example of two
cultures coming together – until the Jews are forcibly exiled from their homes
by the end of the movie.

And that pretty much sums up the ethnic influences in my
novels.

I am one hundred percent Russian Jewish by ethnicity. All
four of my grandparents lived in what was known as the Pale – an area where
Jews were permitted to live without restriction, encompassing Russian
territories such as Ukraine.In the
beginning of the 20th century, my grandparents

immigrated to the
United States because of the violence against Jews known as pogroms. My father
used to tell me that me that his mother hid under a table as Cossacks shot guns
into her house. Those members of my grandparents’ families who remained in the
Pale disappeared into the night and fog of the Holocaust after the Nazis took
over those areas.

As an adult, I am a non-practicing Jew with strong ties to
my ethnic roots. What does that mean? In
my case, it means an awareness of and familiarity with the religious aspects –
the prayers, the songs, the rituals – even though I no longer believe or
practice. It means knowing what’s kosher
or not when I’m picking up a tray of something to take to my cousin’s house. It
means an affinity for bagels and lox, for Chinese food on Christmas, for jokes
with a Yiddish twist, for a certain range of mountains in upstate New York, for
matzo dipped in egg and fried in oil. It means going to Jewish themed movies in
Boca Raton. It means Seinfeld and Jerry Lewis and Mel Brooks. It means an
awareness of history, including what happened to Jews in Europe 70 years ago,
an eye out for swastikas being carved in cars, and knowing how to react when an
acquaintance laughingly suggests sending all the Jews here to Israel.(Yep, that really happened. She didn’t
realize I was Jewish until a minute after she made the comment. She’s no longer
an acquaintance.) It means a pride in our survival and in our diversity of opinions
and practices, in our support of social justice for everyone, and in our sense
of humor.

So no surprise that when crafting Kolya, the hero for my thriller
series, I made him one-quarter Jewish and made his fiancée a non-practicing Jew
from an orthodox family.Sound familiar?
You know the old saying - Write what you know.

But what about the other three-quarters ethnicity for Kolya?

Remember the dancing Russian men in Fiddler on the Roof?

In my teenage years, I became interested in Russia and
Russian culture, despite the strong strain of anti-Semitism in Russian society.There was – and is – a dark brooding quality
to Russian culture and literature that appealed to my teenage dark brooding
mind. Okay, I know it’s a cliché, but sometimes clichés are true – like dinner
in France really is generally better than dinner in England. Sorry, England.
Love the literature. And there really is a brooding quality to Russian
literature.

Russia straddles east and west, and has never completely
belonged to either, despite the efforts of Peter the Great to Westernize
Russian society of his time. In my younger years, Russia was our enemy – we
faced each other across the cultural and political battleground that was the
Cold War. Final element in my fascination with Russia was the fact that my grandparents came from a part of what was then
the Russian empire.

So back in those dark and brooding years – teenager remember
- I launched into an investigation of Russian literature. I read Dostoyevsky, Crime and Punishment and Notes from the Underground. I tried to
read The Brothers Karamazov, but
quickly reached my limit on my Dostoyevsky fascination. I read short stories by
Gogol and plays by Chekov. I read Tolstoy – although I admit to skimming a bit
in War and Peace. I found and read
Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, a biting satire on Soviet society yet
filled with religious fervor.

Then there were the Russian composers who reinforced that
dark brooding theme. Stravinsky, Rite of
Spring. Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald
Mountain. Okay, okay – so my first introduction to both of those pieces was due to a Disney movie -- not
quite the height of cultural knowledge – but damn it, the music is both dark
and disturbing. After all, Stravinsky’s Rite
of Spring started a riot in Paris.

I talked my grandfather into teaching me Russian, but we
didn’t get very far. We did the alphabet – and then he handed me a book and
told me, “Go learn.” I tried a bit, but Cyrillic is difficult – and as a
teenager, I had little patience. I gave up on the language until recently when
I discovered Duolingo. (Now I can confidently order coffee with milk and
sugar.)

And now, as a writer of espionage fiction, I remain
fascinated by Russia – not only because of its cultural history and my personal
history, but because it is once again an enemy – after a brief period in the
1990s and early 2000s, when things seemed like they might be different. No
longer.

So, in crafting my protagonist, Kolya, I put my Jewish
heritage and my interest in Russia together to create a character who never
completely fits in anywhere. In Russia, he’s the ex-pat who left the country at
the age of fourteen – and who is part Jewish. To his Jewish fiancée’s family,
he’s a non-Jew. To American spy agencies, he’s Russian – which is useful for
operational purposes but which exposes him to a level of suspicion from certain
fellow intelligence officers.

For many of us, especially for writers, there is a delicate
dance between our desire to belong to a community and the emotional distance we
often experience. What better way to illustrate that dance than with a
character who straddles multiple cultures?

6 comments:

When I was 30, I discovered that my father's father was a Russian Jew. I figured it out myself; my parents never told me because Jews were non grata in the 1950s Protestant culture I grew up in. Before moving to my home town, my father had concealed his ethnicity by changing his name from Sidney Fogelman to Richard Sheldon. When I finally understood my heritage, I was glad I had something that distinguished me from the sanctimonious WASPs around me.

What an interesting blog about your family history (and the dreadful things your grandparents had to go through -- it's hard to imagine!). Obviously you have a rich and great heritage - and you draw from that to create the terrific characters in your books. Thanks for reminding us of history, and also of the many contributions the great Russian writers made in literature and music. Great post!

The complexity of your blog is riveting, S. Lee. So rich with culture, politics, history, and personal story. We've talked about it in the past, but this really brings it to life -- and no wonder your characters are so rich and memorable. Thanks for a great post! Gayle

Thank you for sharing your family history with us! I must confess, you were a much more studious young adult than I was--you tried learning Russian, I joined the cheerleading squad. You read Tolstoy, I read V.C. Andrews. Of course, after college you went to law school and I went to culinary school, so there you go. ;)

A little late to the party, but I found this fascinating. I knew some things about your background, but this an in depth revelation. It's amazing how our history impacts our present. My family is mostly Swedish and Scottish, and we have small traditions that come from generations past that have been passed down for decades, maybe centuries. Several years ago my husband and I went to Scotland, specifically to the Highlands from whence my ancestors hailed. We went to see the castle of my clan in Breamer, and, lo and behold, if I'd been there just a few years earlier, I could have bought it. It is a museum now, and definitely a fixer upper, but what fun to sign the clan book and learn about the residents and their connection to Scottish history. I grew more roots. Thanks for sharing your story.